Read The Atomic Weight of Secrets or The Arrival of the Mysterious Men in Black Online
Authors: Eden Unger Bowditch
That’s just silliness,
she thought, yawning and feeling sleepily reassured. And as real sleep pressed its advances upon her, she smiled.
What else could he possibly have wanted?
The last pair of eyes closed, and Miss Brett fell soundly into slumber. Deeply relaxed, she slept easily now that her charges were safely present. The green and gold train ambled on into the night. All aboard slept soundly, as the mysteries that were to come tomorrow lay just beyond the horizon.
— Book Two —
PROLOGUE
The following article appeared in
The New York Times,
fall, 1903 (actual date withheld).
The police came to the conclusion that the young man was Italian. This was because Italian coins were found in his jacket pocket, and because his rather worn clothes had tailoring marks in Italian. The trousers, it was noted, were made in
Italia.
But in truth, these were not such terribly mysterious or important clues. In truth, the fact that the murdered man was Italian would matter little to the police of New York City. In truth, they would never know what had happened in that tunnel or why.
The article did, however, fail to mention three terribly mysterious and important clues. First, in the right hand of the victim was a corner of a map showing a sliver of the Apennines mountain range. Second, in the left hand of the victim was a fistful of black feathers. Third—and the absence of this clue from the article was in no way the fault of the journalist, his editors, the coroner, or the police investigators at the scene, because this terribly mysterious and important clue was gone by the time any of them found the body—hidden by a rock, down the tunnel, in the shadows, there was a crumpled envelope with a broken wax seal and a torn note inside that, when it was intact and legible, read simply, “They will be on the train.”
Mom, Dad, Nate, Lu, Jeffrey, Jules, Lyric, Cyrus, and Jill
To the wonderful friends and readers from all over the world:
Alexander Carlsson
Alexandra Curtis Boyer
Andrea Spira
Andrew Ferguson
April Sugarman
Barbara Price
Bernie Schwartz
Chuchi Oka Zeh
Clare Fleishman
Cyrus Unger Bowditch
Jeff
Cliodhna Noonan
Danny Neville
David Bredin
Doris Bowman and her friends up in Scotland
Dr. Brandon Canfield
Dr. Dorothee Heisenberg
Dr. Gavin Rae
Dr. Trent Pomplun
Elizabeth Bredin
Ford Duvall
Gabriella Gensheimer
Innes Wyness
Jane Cowper
Jason Williford
Jennifer Fugate
Jorge Verlenden
Joseph and Rosie Pearce
Josh Dalsimer
Julius Unger Bowditch
Kate Bowditch
Laura Bradford
David
Lavanda Davis
Lisa Dalsimer
Lukas Hager
Lynn Towart
Lyric Unger Bowditch
Madeline Cowper
Dr. Marla Friend Hartzen
Mary Bauer
Maya Rinehart
Mia Dixler
Michele Carlsson
Mohini Kumar
Nate Unger Bowditch
Ned Oldham
Pascale Rozier
Patrick Ervin
Polly Thomas
Rachel Tunis
Randi Danforth
Sandy All en
Sebastian Bauer
Shireen Akram-Boshar
Sih Oka-Zeh
Sonali Edwards
Stephen Bredin
Steve Parke
Tracy Copes
Wendy Vissar
Michael
To the incomparable Harrison Demchick, who has an eye and an ear capable of knowing more than the rest of us. I wish you were not always right. It would have been so much easier. And to Bruce, who never wavers when he finds something he trusts—and then works unendingly to make it the best it can be.
To Jonathan Scott Fuqua, who has the brilliant habit of standing when all the world is sitting down and for speaking out when all the world doesn’t seem to bother. I can never thank you enough.
For my children, Julius, Lyric, and Cyrus, who showed me where “magic” falls short and that real magic is something we can touch.
And to the love of my life, without whom I just wouldn’t be—Nate.
Eden Unger Bowditch has been writing since she was very small. She has been writing since she could use her brain to think of something to say. She wrote at the University of California, Berkeley, and she wrote songs as a member of the band enormous.
She has written stories and plays and shopping lists and screenplays and dreams and poems—and also books about her longtime Baltimore home. She has lived in Chicago and France and other places on the planet, and has been a journalist, as well as a welder, and an editor, and other things, too.
The
Atomic Weight of Secrets
is her first young adult novel, and she has been as excited writing it as she hopes you are reading it.
Presently, Eden lives with her family (husband and three children) in Cairo, Egypt. But that’s another story entirely...